
āMaking corporations pay their fair share,ā is the Greensā overarching campaign theme for the Queensland election according to South Brisbane candidate Amy MacMahon.
MacMahon has a big chance of joining Greens MP for Maiwar, Michael Berkman, in the Queensland parliament. Sportsbet odds indicate she is the clear favourite to win the seat. Other Greens candidates, such as Kirsten Lovejoy in McConnel, have good chances too.
MacMahon told on October 22 that the Greens are focussed on promoting and expanding the public sector. Some things just ācanāt be left to the private sectorā, she said.
āClimate change is one such example. Leaving it to the private sector and having these small kind of tweaking market mechanisms hasnāt worked.
āWhat we really need now is direct government investment into publicly-owned utilities and energy generation.ā
This would make possible a planned reduction in greenhouse pollution, while guaranteeing jobs and livelihoods for affected communities.
The Greens are also talking about public investment into manufacturing and setting up a publicly-owned pharmaceutical company.
MacMahon said there simply āshouldnāt be a private marketā in healthcare and education.
These policies go far beyond anything the Labor Party has put forward for decades. So, it is little wonder that the Greensā campaign has been generating so much support.
State schools in South Brisbane are underfunded by about $12 million per year, MacMahon said. The Greensā plan is to make sure schools are āfully funded and genuinely freeā.
The Greens are also pushing for free school lunches and breakfasts for students: this would help families doing it tough and help hectic family lives.
The Greens are pushing the public healthcare system to be expanded with 9500 more doctors and nurses. MacMahon said free hospital parking is also a necessity. āEssentially, hospital parking functions like a hidden tax on health care. If you have to go to the hospital and youāre paying $40 for parking, thatās money that shouldnāt be coming out of your pocket.ā
The Greens took a policy of $1 public transport fares to the 2017 election. This year, they are saying public transport should be free. This makes a lot of sense, because there are big cost savings to be made when you donāt need an infrastructure to collect fares.
MacMahon said the plan is eminently feasible. āQueensland is an incredibly wealth state: itās just that so much of that wealth goes into offshore accounts or flows into the pockets of mining CEOs or investors overseas.ā
between 2010 and 2020, mining corporations exported more than $480 billion of coal, minerals and LNG, and only paid 7% in royalties.
āWe are proposing an increase in royalties, as well as state-based taxes on property developers and the big banks. Weād raise about $68 billion, that we could invest in these things.
āAll of our plans are fully costed, unlike Labor and the LNP who havenāt put out their costings yet.
āWe know this is feasible in Queensland. The one gap is political will: thatās whatās missing.ā
When asked about the corporate pushback against the Greensā agenda, MacMahon acknowledged the power they had.
āThe majority of Queenslanders want big companies to pay their fair share, so we can fully fund essential servicesā.
She said this could be achieved by building a popular movement, on the ground, and āusing the parliamentary power and pressure that we have to push back against these companiesā.
She said the Greens āwonāt back down, because we donāt take corporate donations.
āWe donāt answer to lobby groups; we donāt answer to those big corporations, like Labor and the LNP.ā
MacMahon said people are fed up with the LNP and also with Labor.
āPeople arenāt stupid; they can see whatās going on. They can see the influence of these big corporate donations. Weāve had so many messages from people who have said they gave Labor their final chance in 2017.ā
Labor has launched its dirty tricksā campaign to try and undermine support for the Greens.
When the LNP announced they would preference Labor last, Labor began spreading a rumour that the Greens had made a deal with the LNP.
But the Greens are placing the LNP after Labor on all their how-to-vote cards, and have emphatically ruled out supporting an LNP minority government.
Labor also tried to manufacture a scandal about a satirical tweet made by a South Brisbane Greens volunteer.
In South Brisbane, disgruntled former Greens member is running as an independent with relatively conservative talking points and is Labor and the LNP before the Greens ā another complication. However, MacMahon believes people will be able to clearly see the issues when it comes time to vote.
āWeāve just seen Labor promoting the fact that theyāve opened up 18 new coal mines [in North Queensland], while down here [in Brisbane] theyāre [pushing the fact that] they are opening up publicly-owned clean energy.
āPeople can see through this: they want representatives with a clear vision for Queensland who are going to be honest.ā
The Greens are running with an āintentionally bold platformā, she said, ābecause we recognise the impact that privatisation has had; we recognise the impact that the decline in the union movement has had; we recognise the impact that a decade of stagnant wages has had; and we know that thereās better ways to do this.ā
[Alex Bainbridge is the national convenor of Socialist Alliance. The Socialist Alliance is calling for a vote for the Greens in this election.]
Video:Ā Amy MacMahon: What would a Greens' win mean?Ā .